Yellow Sally Redd's Flies

Yellow Sally

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The little yellow sally imitates a female yellow stonefly laying eggs. It is a staple on many streams throughout the summer.

FAQs

What is a Yellow Sally fly used for?


A Yellow Sally fly imitates the smaller yellow stoneflies that show up around trout streams, especially in late spring and summer. It’s a great dry fly when trout are watching for little stoneflies fluttering, skittering, or getting knocked onto the water. Small bug, big confidence boost.

What does a Yellow Sally imitate?


A Yellow Sally imitates a small adult stonefly, usually with a slim yellow body and low-riding wings. Stoneflies spend most of their lives underwater as nymphs, then crawl out onto rocks, banks, or streamside vegetation to become adults. Later, egg-laying females may return to the water, where trout can hit them hard.

When should I fish a Yellow Sally?


Fish a Yellow Sally when you see small yellow stoneflies near riffles, rocky banks, pocket water, or streamside brush. They’re especially useful during warmer weather when smaller stoneflies are active and trout are willing to eat on top. In the East, Yellow Sallies can create excellent dry-fly fishing even when the giant stonefly circus isn’t in town.

How should I fish a Yellow Sally dry fly?


Start with a drag-free drift along seams, riffle edges, pocket water, and banks. If trout are chasing egg-laying adults, add a tiny twitch or skate to suggest a fluttering stonefly on the surface. Keep the movement subtle—just enough to look alive, not like the bug got into gas-station coffee.

Can I fish a Yellow Sally with a dropper?


Absolutely. A Yellow Sally dry can work well in a dry-dropper setup with a small nymph underneath, especially when trout might be feeding on both adult stoneflies and subsurface bugs. Use it as the visible top fly and trail a small beadhead, mayfly nymph, or stonefly nymph below to cover both lanes.

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